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fichbio

Silica deposits on Mars with features resembling hot spring biosignatures at El Tatio i... - 0 views

shared by fichbio on 24 Nov 16 - No Cached
Paul N liked it
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    Hydrothermal deposits on Mars may provide the best opportunity to find Martian biosignatures. Ruff and Farmer report that silica structures created by biotic and abiotic process in hot springs at El Tatio, Chile resemble those found in Gusev crater, thus making it an ideal location for future missions.
Tom Gheysens

New genes spring, spread from non-coding DNA - 0 views

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    looks like evolution is getting better and better understood
Juxi Leitner

Academics and Research: Virginia Tech Students Build Humanoid | Robotics Trends - 0 views

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    CHARLI is the first untethered, autonomous, full-sized, walking, humanoid robot with four moving limbs and a head, built in the United States. His two long legs and arms can move and gesture thanks to a combination of pulleys, springs, carbon fiber rods, and actuators. CHARLI soon will be able to talk as well.
LeopoldS

Operation Socialist: How GCHQ Spies Hacked Belgium's Largest Telco - 4 views

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    interesting story with many juicy details on how they proceed ... (similarly interesting nickname for the "operation" chosen by our british friends) "The spies used the IP addresses they had associated with the engineers as search terms to sift through their surveillance troves, and were quickly able to find what they needed to confirm the employees' identities and target them individually with malware. The confirmation came in the form of Google, Yahoo, and LinkedIn "cookies," tiny unique files that are automatically placed on computers to identify and sometimes track people browsing the Internet, often for advertising purposes. GCHQ maintains a huge repository named MUTANT BROTH that stores billions of these intercepted cookies, which it uses to correlate with IP addresses to determine the identity of a person. GCHQ refers to cookies internally as "target detection identifiers." Top-secret GCHQ documents name three male Belgacom engineers who were identified as targets to attack. The Intercept has confirmed the identities of the men, and contacted each of them prior to the publication of this story; all three declined comment and requested that their identities not be disclosed. GCHQ monitored the browsing habits of the engineers, and geared up to enter the most important and sensitive phase of the secret operation. The agency planned to perform a so-called "Quantum Insert" attack, which involves redirecting people targeted for surveillance to a malicious website that infects their computers with malware at a lightning pace. In this case, the documents indicate that GCHQ set up a malicious page that looked like LinkedIn to trick the Belgacom engineers. (The NSA also uses Quantum Inserts to target people, as The Intercept has previously reported.) A GCHQ document reviewing operations conducted between January and March 2011 noted that the hack on Belgacom was successful, and stated that the agency had obtained access to the company's
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    I knew I wasn't using TOR often enough...
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    Cool! It seems that after all it is best to restrict employees' internet access only to work-critical areas... @Paul TOR works on network level, so it would not help here much as cookies (application level) were exploited.
Christophe Praz

Curiosity Rover Sees a Pixel's-Worth of Comet Siding Spring - 3 views

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    It's something...
LeopoldS

US Air Force Strategy article on SPS - 1 views

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    From Garretson ... À bit tendentious but nice read ...
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    actually its nice - perhaps without true patriotic/military backup lots of great things will never happen!
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    The more money they spend on this the less they spend on destruction and killing :-) so yes, most welcome ...
Ma Ru

Some movement toward academic spring here in UK - 2 views

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    "Giving people the right to roam freely over publicly funded research will usher in a new era of academic discovery and collaboration, and will put the UK at the very forefront of open research".
pandomilla

Amoeboid Robot Navigates Without a Brain - Technology Review - 2 views

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    A new blob-like robot described in the journal Advanced Robotics uses springs, feet, "protoplasm" and a distributed nervous system to move in a manner inspired by the slime mold Physarum polycepharum. Watch it ooze across a flat surface, The Blob style: Skip to 1:00 if you just want to be creeped out by its life-like quivering.
pandomilla

New evidence that comets deposited building blocks of life on primordial Earth - 0 views

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    New research reported in San Diego on March 27 at the 243rd National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS) provides further support for the idea that comets bombarding Earth billions of years ago carried and deposited the key ingredients for life to spring up on the planet. "Our research shows that the building blocks of life could, indeed, have remained intact despite the tremendous shock wave and other violent conditions in a comet impact," Blank said. "Comets really would have been the ideal packages for delivering ingredients for the chemical evolution thought to have resulted in life.
pandomilla

Uncoiling the cucumber's enigma - 1 views

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    Captivated by a strange coiling behavior in the grasping tendrils of the cucumber plant, researchers at Harvard University have characterized a new type of spring that is soft when pulled gently and stiff when pulled strongly. Instead of unwinding to a flat ribbon under stress, as an untwisted coil normally would, the cucumber's tendrils actually coil further.
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    ...interesting discovery that can add something to my ongoing Ariadna...
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    And here you have the paper published today on Science http://www.sciencemag.org/content/337/6098/1087.full
Marion Nachon

NASA Spacecraft Data Suggest Water Flowing on Mars - 2 views

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    HIRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) images show flows lengthen and darken on rocky equator-facing slopes from late spring to early fall. The seasonality, latitude distribution and brightness changes suggest a volatile material is involved, but there is no direct detection of one.
johannessimon81

Genetic modification for climate change (dutch) - 0 views

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    Engineering and improving great tits so they can better withstand climate change. By selectively breeding and genetically engineering the birds scientists try to keep the time when the birds produce offspring in sync with the changing availability of food sources in spring (mainly grubs).
Paul N

Gravitational wave discovery kills 90% of physics theories - 0 views

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    "The BICEP2 data would eliminate about 90% of inflationary models, Andrei Linde, a cosmologist at Stanford University in California, told a packed auditorium at MIT the day after the BICEP2 announcement (see picture below). Many of those models do not produce gravitational waves at detectable levels, said Linde, who is one of the founders of inflation theory." Is there any hope for LISA now?
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    Of course - the data is more proof that GWs exist!!
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    so you don't expect any impact on the science objectives of Lisa at all?
anonymous

HTC Vive: Virtual Reality That's So Damn Real I Can't Even Handle It - 2 views

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    New VR headset by Valve and HTC outclasses everything else that out there. Developer kit this spring, full version by the end of the year.
LeopoldS

Seasonality in human cognitive brain responses - 2 views

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    interesting study showing seasonal changes to brain functions Agata, you didn't tell us about this yet :-) "the present study provides compelling evidence for previously unappreciated annual varia- tions in the cerebral activity required to sustain ongoing cognitive processes in healthy volunteers. The data further show that this annual rhythmicity is cognitive-process-specific (i.e., the phase of the rhythm changes between cognitive tasks), speaking for a complex impact of season on human brain function. Annual var- iations in cognitive brain function may contribute to explain intraindividual cognitive changes that could emerge at specific times of year."
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    Thank you for this interesting study. I will make a brief intro about it during our Wednesday meeting. Especially, that spring is coming...;)
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